Dialogue

Vocabulary (Review)

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Lesson Transcript

INTRODUCTION
Jasmine: Hi everyone, Jasmine here.
Philip: Hei, jeg er Philip I am Philip.
Jasmine: And welcome to Basic Bootcamp Lesson 5. Counting from 100 to 1 million in Norwegian. This is the fifth in the five-part series that will help you ease your way into Norwegian. In this lesson, we will continue with more of the essentials of Norwegian numbers but we will venture into higher number territory. The numbers over 100 all the way to 1 million.
Philip: Sounds great.
Jasmine: You will be listening to two people at an auction.
Philip: That’s right. They will be bidding on this ancient Norwegian vase.
Jasmine: Let’s listen to the conversation.
DIALOGUE
A: etthundre,
B: tohundre,
A: trehundre,
B: firehundre,
A: femhundre,
B: sekshundre,
A: syvhundre,
B: åttehundre,
A: nihundre
B: ettusen,
A: femtusen,
B: titusen,
A: femtitusen,
B: etthundre tusen,
A: en million.
Jasmine: Let's here it slowly now.
A: etthundre,
B: tohundre,
A: trehundre,
B: firehundre,
A: femhundre,
B: sekshundre,
A: syvhundre,
B: åttehundre,
A: nihundre
B: ettusen,
A: femtusen,
B: titusen,
A: femtitusen,
B: etthundre tusen,
A: en million.
Jasmine: And now the translation.
A: etthundre,
A: one hundred
B: tohundre,
B: two hundred
A: trehundre,
A: three hundred
B: firehundre,
B: four hundred
A: femhundre,
A: five hundred
B: sekshundre,
B: six hundred
A: syvhundre,
A: seven hundred
B: åttehundre,
B: eight hundred
A: nihundre
A: nine hundred
B: ettusen,
B: one thousand
A: femtusen,
A: five thousand
B: titusen,
B: ten thousand
A: femtitusen,
A: fifty thousand
B: etthundre tusen,
B: one hundred thousand
A: en million.
A: one million.
POST CONVERSATION BANTER
Jasmine: Let’s use these numbers a little. Let’s talk about prices in Norway.
Philip: Okay let’s take the 2012 currency rate where USD1 is roughly equivalent to 6 Norwegian kroner. Prices in Norway do vary a lot. It depends where you are and what you eat.
Jasmine: What’s the price of an average meal in Oslo? What about very nice meal in Oslo?
Philip: Well Oslo is not the cheapest city in Norway especially at the tourist spots but you can get full for about 40 to 100 Norwegian Krone.
Jasmine: Which is roughly USD7 to USD17. What about very nice meal?
Philip: Oh, the price will jump up to above 500 krone which would be something like a full course.
Jasmine: Wow! That’s about USD90. The food must be really good there.
Philip: But for an average Norwegian meal or my absolute favorite fiskesuppe USD20 should be enough.
Jasmine: So how would you say those prices in Norwegian Philip?
VOCAB LIST
Philip: Well let’s take a look at the vocab.
Jasmine: First we have
Philip: Ett hundre.
Jasmine: 100
Philip: Ett hundre. Ett hundre.
Jasmine: And then we have
Philip: To hundre. To hundre.
Jasmine: 200
Philip: To hundre. To hundre.
Jasmine: Next is
Philip: Tre hundre.
Jasmine: 300
Philip: Tre hundre. Tre hundre.
Jasmine: Then we have
Philip: Fire hundre.
Jasmine: 400
Philip: Fire hundre. Fire hundre.
Jasmine: Our next word is
Philip: Fem hundre.
Jasmine: 500
Philip: Fem hundre. Fem hundre.
Jasmine: Next is
Philip: Seks hundre.
Jasmine: 600
Philip: Seks hundre. Seks hundre.
Jasmine: Then we have
Philip: Syv hundre.
Jasmine: 700
Philip: Syv. hundre. Syv hundre.
Jasmine: The next word is
Philip: Åtte hundre.
Jasmine: 800
Philip: Åtte hundre. Åtte hundre.
Jasmine: Then there is
Philip: Ni hundre.
Jasmine: 900
Philip: Ni hundre. Ni hundre.
Jasmine: We will continue with
Philip: Ett tusen.
Jasmine: 1000
Philip: Ett tusen. Ett tusen.
Jasmine: Next is
Philip: Fem tusen.
Jasmine: 5000
Philip: Fem tusen. Fem tusen.
Jasmine: We will continue with
Philip: Ti tusen.
Jasmine: 10000
Philip: Ti tusen.
Jasmine: Next is
Philip: Femti tusen.
Jasmine: 50000
Philip: Femti tusen. Femti tusen.
Jasmine: Then we have
Philip: Ett Hundre tusen.
Jasmine: 100,000
Philip: Ett hundre tusen. Ett hundre tusen.
Jasmine: Finally we have
Philip: En million.
Jasmine: 1 million.
Philip: En million. En million.
VOCAB AND PHRASE USAGE
Jasmine: Let’s take a closer look at our last word which is 1 million. What was it again Philip?
Philip: En million.
Jasmine: 1 million and what about all the other millions? Doesn’t the ending in million change after 1?
Philip: It does but it will be easy to remember.
Jasmine: Listeners, repeat after Philip.
Philip: To millioner. Tre millioner. Fire millioner.
Jasmine: 2 million, 3 million, 4 million.
Philip: Fem millioner. Seks millioner. Syv millioner. Åtte millioner. Ni millioner.
Jasmine: 5 million, 6 million, 7 million, 8 million, 9 million.
Philip: So the change is million becomes millioner in the pleural.
Jasmine: Can we hear an example?
Philip: I am looking for a meaningful one. How about Fire millioner åtte hundre og åtti fem tusen to hundre og førti.
Jasmine: Wow! And what does that mean?
Philip: It’s the current population of Norway.

Lesson focus

Jasmine: Okay. So we use our usual formula here. 4,885,240, same as in English and now let’s have another example. The only one where we pronounce digits separately in Norwegian, a phone number.
Philip: Null syv null fire seks åtte to åtte.
Jasmine: They can also be pronounced in 10s but for better understanding, we use separate digits. All right, now on to the grammar. Let’s take a look at the structure in multiples of 100.
Philip: We’ve already learned how to say 100 ett hundre. So to build multiples of 100, you simply take numbers 2 to 9 and add hundre to the end.
Jasmine: Adding that hundre can be difficult at first but you get the hang of it. So listen and repeat.
Philip: To hundre. Tre hundre. Fire hundre. Fem hundre. Seks hundre. Syv hundre. Åtte hundre. Ni hundre.
Jasmine: From the previous bootcamp lesson, we also remember how to build 3-digit numbers with 100. Now we will use the same system to build numbers 200 through 299. Remember to add an og which means and where we connect the 100s and 10s just like in English. Let’s hear some examples.
Philip: Fire hundre og en.
Jasmine: 401
Philip: To hundre og tjuesyv.
Jasmine: 227
Philip: And next ni hundre og fjorten.
Jasmine: 914. Okay now let’s look at some examples over 1000. Philip, can you give us the word for 1000 again?
Philip: Tusen You don’t really have to say ett, one here.
Jasmine: So 1000 is
Philip: Ett tusen.
Jasmine: And 4000 is
Philip: Fire tusen.
Jasmine: So we take the number 4 and add 1000.
Philip: Yes. The number and then tusen.
Jasmine: So here is what we have. Listeners, repeat after Philip.
Philip: Ett tusen. To tusen. Tre tusen. Fire tusen. Fem tusen. Seks tusen. Syv tusen. Åtte tusen. Ni tusen.
Jasmine: When we say 21,000, 22,000, 23,000, 24,000, we just say the number plus tusen.
Philip: Tjueen tusen, tjueto tusen and so on.
Jasmine: So you just take a multiple of 10. 10, 20, 30, add a number from 1 to 9 and then add 1000. Easy as that. So give us the complicated four-digit number.
Philip: To tusen og tolv.
Jasmine: Nice. That’s the current year 2012. Okay give us one more Philip. The year you were born for example.
Philip: So the year I was born in is ett tusen ni hundre og åttifem but in Norwegian, the year of birth is usually spelled in 10s like in English.
Jasmine: 1985. So the formula with numbers in the thousands is this. First you say, how many thousands you have. Then how many hundreds, then 10s, then 1s.
Philip: Yes like in most languages.

Outro

Jasmine: Okay well I think that’s it for this lesson.
Philip: And also this bootcamp series right?
Jasmine: That’s right.
Philip: Thanks for listening everyone. Hade.
Jasmine: Until next time.

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